The breaks on the service part of the bill would generally range from several dollars for residential customers to several hundred dollars for larger users like businesses, municipalities and lighting districts. They are based on the average number of days of lost service in a given area and will appear soon on bills if the PSC approves the credits.

The utilities have also suspended bill collection and credit actions against customers with past-due bills, either through the end of this month or January.

At the peak, New York utilities reported 2.1 million customers without service after Sandy hit on Oct. 29. Some people lost power for weeks.

Con Ed, which reported about 1.1 million customer outages from Sandy and a subsequent nor’easter, wants to give back $6.5 million to electric and steam customers. Spokesman Allan Drury said the typical residential customer will see $6 in Manhattan and $3 elsewhere. In its filing with the PSC, Con Ed said customers who use its steam system would get credits ranging from $345 to $1,850.

NYSEG is asking for $500,000 in electric bill breaks, ranging from $3 to $441. It also told the PSC it waived customer late payment charges totaling about $294,000 for November. The PSC ordered the waivers for all the affected utilities, but information wasn’t available on what it has cost the others.

Orange and Rockland reported that 85 percent of its customers lost service at some point and it wants to give credits totaling about $800,000, with the typical residential ratepayer getting $3.

National Grid said 18,700 gas customers on Long Island and in New York City would also get credits. Residential users along the shore from Staten Island to Suffolk County would see anywhere from $3 in one part of Queens to $18 in harder-hit Breezy Point. Larger users could expect anywhere from $30 to about $260 based on their locations. The company said it didn’t have an estimate of the total value of the credits.

The requests are on the PSC’s meeting agenda for Thursday morning.

The Long Island Power Authority, which isn’t regulated by the PSC, is also considering $7.3 million in service credits and has foregone $3.5 million in late payments. A residential user would see about $5. The LIPA board is scheduled to take up the credits at a meeting on Monday.